D.E.B Dubois and Langston Hughes fight for Racial Equality Protest is a way of doing an act to be heard or acknowledged with something people disagree with. Throughout history many African American protested through literature. D.E.B Dubois and Langston Hughes are African American authors who have famous works that have gotten attention though the work of literature. These two authors have a lot of the same beliefs and has made a big impact of the African American culture. The two works I’m…
“Citizen: An American Lyric” is a book by Claudia Rankine it details various struggles and happenings happening to African American in the United States. The book is composed as poems in various chapters, while in others she details the struggles of certain people, and in lastly some are short little stories or tragedies that have happened to people in the African American community. The book in the end is just a collection of what Rankine deems important are issues happening to African…
The father of the Black Arts Movement is Amiri Baraka. He got this name because he wrote so many essays, poems, and plays about racial issues in Harlem. In the time there was a lot of racial injustice of African Americans civil rights. Baraka’s most known piece that he has written is his poem called “Black Art.” His works such as “Black Art” and many others have been centered around the lack of civil rights for black people. Baraka works can be interpreted in so many ways because it incites the…
Livesey Abar Perspective in Literature Ms. Apthorp 9 February 2018 Figurative and Musical Devices Developing Themes of Racial Inequality Countee Cullen’s expressive sonnet, From the Dark Tower, explores the emotion of the African-American experience during a time of systemic oppression through his use of vivid symbols and musical devices. In the opening symbol of planting and reaping, Cullen discusses inequitable relationships on the basis of race before transitioning to the stars and the sky…
perseverance are the eternal children of struggle, sculpted throughout the ages by poets, poets like Langston Hughes, who wrote “I, Too” and “Refugee in America” from the depths of black discrimination. “I, Too” describes an African American and his reaction towards black oppression, while “Refugee in America” speaks of the African American longing for true freedom. Eugenia W. Collier, like Hughes, captured the essence of black discrimination, through her poem “From the Dark Tower”. Taking a…
African Literature has come a long way to be as unique as it is now. This has been promoted since the 1960 and even further years back. Chinua Achebe, a renowned novelist was one of the pioneers of African Literature. In this essay, I will elaborate on the life and times of this great writer. Achebe was born on 16th November, 1930 in an Ibo village called Nneobi but he was raised by his parents in Ogidi in South-Eastern Nigeria. Achebe's bright future all…
Contemporary writer, John M. Barry conveys through his writing that he has an immense fascination with the complex mechanics of the Mississippi River. Through his clever use of figurative language and eloquent diction, as well as his use of syntax, he communicates this. Throughout the passage Barry’s fascination is conveyed through his use of figurative language to describe and bring life to the river. His sophisticated diction creates a basis of reliability, quoting scientists and uses…
Chukwuma Njoku Book report Richard Wright’s Native Son Who Was He? What Qualifies him? Richard Nathaniel Wright was an African-American author of controversial books, short stories, some of which are very popular. Quite a bit of his writing concerns racial topics, particularly identified with the predicament of African Americans amid the late nineteenth to mid-twentieth hundreds of years, who endured separation and savagery in the South, and the North. Wright finished…
The Story of an Hour is a short story by author Kate Chopin, that was published in 1984. The story was originally published in Vogue, on December 6th, titled "The Dream of an Hour”. Louise Mallard, the main character, has heart problems. Therefore, at the beginning of the text we are told that she must be informed of her husband’s death in a careful manner. Her sister Josephine delivers the news. The reader is also told that Louise’s husband’s friend, named Richards, had learned about his…
especially in the United States. Langston Hughes, however, knew how to turn those hardships into poetry. Hughes was a strong believer of equality, and he expressed this in his poems. Because he grew up as an African American during the time of segregation in the United States and not only saw but experienced first hand the many acts of unkindness done to African Americans, Langston Hughes’s “I, Too” has a universal theme of racial equality. Langston Hughes could accredit much of his success to…